Intoxication (2002) Poster

(2002)

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6/10
Strange
Rodrigo_Amaro13 March 2017
For those accustomed with Gaspar Noé unconventional and visceral pictures, "Intoxicated" is unlike anything he ever done. But in a way, it also feels like a strange trip though more ecstatic and a real work for a change. Here, he documents Stéphane Drouot, a friend and collaborator in some of his films, also a director of his own and who made one short film years ago, and Drouot details a little about his film experiences and his HIV positive status. The latter, though mentioned very briefly and right from the start, seems the more potent fact since he exposes (and excuses as well) the fact he's quite slow in thought and manners due to the medication he takes.

Noé's intentions with the film aren't much clear neither Drouot's stories. Perhaps it feels like a testament where one feels inclined to make because anything could happen or just one deep urge in sharing about what was like to have a difficult experience in the movie business, as we're told by Drouot - apparently he tried to make a bigger project after his other film but since most of his talking isn't much clear it's hard to get an impression of what happened. If Noé was trying to make a point about the impact a chronic disease affects a person's life than he barely succeed with that because the main focus sticks with the main figure talking about the movie he wanted to make (not to mention that in the opening scene while he's taking his medication, of the three pills he had to take, he drops one and doesn't care at all). Might work as a warning to some, protect yourself so you won't have to depend on drugs that leave you slow and with a wandering mind. But if that's the case, Gaspar has better. A short film with similar topic "SIDA", which is a whole improvement and had that motif in mind.

Though hard to think what is the real intent of the movie and of its director, "Intoxication" intrigues us and manages to bring reactions and emotions on us. Couldn't find much on Stéphane Drouot except that he died ten years after this film (made at the same time he had a role in "Irreversible"), no cause given but probably complications from AIDS or something related with his treatment. And so, for this brief encounter here he seemed like someone who truly loved being in the movie business but just couldn't find a way to truly succeed in it. Despite his off-state kind of mood and speech, you can sense that. 6/10
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4/10
Not particularly interesting or insightful
Horst_In_Translation10 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is "Intoxication", a five-minute documentary short film from 2002, so already over 15 years old and this is a work by director Gaspar Noé and even if he is from Argentina, this is in French like most of his works. It is basically an interview with Stéphane Drouot, an actor who appeared in Noé's Irreversible and Drouot talks about his own filmmaking ambitions and the one movie he made and also the struggles that come from him being HIV-positive and perhaps get in the way of him having a film career. It is really simple. I am not sure you can see Noé's style here, perhaps from the big letters early on that are really trademark Noé and also from the subject (Aids, or SIDA as the French say) as this is not the only Noé film dealing with this subject. He made many short films, also many music videos, and this is one that is probably only seen by hardcore Noé fans (no pun intended) who don't mind the static camera from beginning to end. I am pretty sure it really means a lot to the filmmaker, especially as Drouot died in 2012, a decade after this was made, but for wide audiences, it really isn't. A pretty personal movie that can serve as a memory, but for people with no connection to Drouot, it is not really worth seeing. I give it a thumbs-down as a whole.
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